The Taoist principle of effortless action applied to attention management, where true focus emerges from releasing forced concentration rather than grinding effort.
Wu wei—often translated as 'non-action' or 'actionless action'—describes the paradox of achieving maximum effectiveness through minimal resistance. In attention practice, this means recognizing that forced focus depletes your scarcest resource, while aligned attention flows naturally. Laozi teaches that the strongest waters are those that flow around obstacles rather than crashing against them. When you stop fighting distraction and instead align your attention with genuine interest and natural rhythms, paradoxically you become more focused. This applies directly to knowledge work: the programmer in flow state isn't trying harder; they've entered wu wei. The practice requires first releasing the cultural myth that attention demands willpower, then observing where your energy naturally concentrates when external pressure is removed.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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